does it make a difference if you know you will?At first glance, you’d think the seller of the “2,881 sq ft” Manhattan loft on the 3rd floor at 46 White Street (Woods Mercantile Building) would be thrilled selling on June…
does it make a difference if you know you will?At first glance, you’d think the seller of the “2,881 sq ft” Manhattan loft on the 3rd floor at 46 White Street (Woods Mercantile Building) would be thrilled selling on June…
sometimes The Market mystifies…I keep staring at the the record of the recent sale of the Manhattan loft #3A at 52 Thomas Street, without achieving clarity. That facts are simple but inexplicable: the first resale in this 2007 new development…
odd way to signal negotiabilityThe Manhattan loft on the 2nd floor of 34 Laight Street has a listing history you don’t see every day: to market at $1.895mm on November 5, price increase to $2.1mm on January 7, contract by…
unless it was the drop dead viewsWhen the “1,895 sq ft” Manhattan loft #10N at 90 Franklin Street came to market on September 13 for $2.6mm that asking price of $1,372/ft could have been considered rather … errr … aggressive,…
had been a super white boxThe Manhattan loft #PH-W at 19 Warren Street sold on June 7 through a deed filed today (according to StreetEasy), yet the New York Observer observed in yesterday’s edition on-line that it had been sold,…
it had been rented, hadn’t it??I cannot find a complete past history of the Manhattan loft #9A at 1 York Street (One York, d’oh!) that sold on May 25, but I can tell you that our data-base shows that it…
3rd time = charmThe Manhattan loft on the 5th floor at 58 Walker Street had been a serial non-seller until finally selling on May 5 at $2,832,500. It had not sold when offered at $3.5mm (and higher) from July through…
another one that fractures (proves?) Conventional WisdomThe Manhattan loft #2A at 44 Laight Street sold on May 9 without a price drop despite taking 11 months to find that contract. Let’s repeat what we know about Conventional Wisdom and a…
is this the price of overreaching? The Conventional Wisdom is that a Manhattan loft that does not sell after being professionally exposed to The Market for ‘a long time’ has failed to sell because of price. This wisdom is not…
I should not take these things personallyManhattan loft snob that I am, I tend to have an irrational sense of regret when loft owners sell a loft to move to an apartment. A ridiculous reaction, even if anyone cared. But…
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